Month: April 2019

Home / Month: April 2019

ST. GEORGE, Utah – With a 7-2 victory over Northeastern Oklahoma A&M on Saturday, Chipola (Fla.) won the 2015 NJCAA Division I Softball Championship. Claiming their program’s second national title, the Indians raised the trophy for the first time since 2007.

 

BOX SCORE | TOURNAMENT AWARDS

Anchoring Chipola’s victory on the mound was sophomore pitcher Jessica Elliott. In the complete game effort, she recorded four strikeouts and allowed just two runs on six hits and one walk.

Freshmen catcher Savannah Ryken and freshman right fielder Gabriela Santos led the Indians’ offensive attack. Ryken had a 3-for-4 day at the plate with two RBIs. Santos went 1-for-2 with a team-high 3 RBIs, driving in two runs in the bottom of the third inning with a two-out single.

Chipola got on the board early with a single from Ryken, scoring sophomore second baseman Ciara Jones from second. Trailing 1-0 going into the third inning, Northeastern Oklahoma A&M increased its deficit with a costly mistake.

With runners at second and third, Golden Norse sophomore pitcher Quincy Charleston struck out Indians sophomore first baseman Jenna Reeves, but the pitch was wild. Reeves advanced to first while sophomore centerfielder Shelby Clark scored from third. The unregistered out became more costly for Northeastern Oklahoma A&M later in the inning with Santos’ two-run single.

The Golden Norse responded in the top of the fourth inning with a two-run home run by freshman catcher Madison VanBurkleo, cutting Chipola’s lead to 4-2. Northeastern Oklahoma A&M picked up two quick outs in the bottom half of the inning but again struggled to retire the side. With two outs, Chipola posted two runs behind a single from Ryken and a Golden Norse error.

After taking the 6-2 lead, the Indians tacked on an insurance run in the bottom of the fifth inning. Santos drove in sophomore third baseman Brashante’ Dareus on a sacrifice fly.

Chipola’s run to the title was defined by solid pitching and defense. The Indians opened the tournament with a 7-1 victory over Shelton State (Ala.), followed by a 6-1 win against Howard (Texas) in the second round. A 2-1 quarterfinal victory over Miami Dade (Fla.) was followed up by Chipola’s first victory over Northeastern Oklahoma A&M, a 2-1 win in the semifinals.

Capping off the year with the 7-2 title game victory, Chipola improved to 49-10 for the season. The Golden Norse dropped their record to 50-16 for 2015. –

— Courtesy of NJCAA.org

No-Waste Grocery Stores Are Coming To Canada

April 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

VANCOUVER — Customers at a boutique Vancouver grocery store won’t find racks of individually packaged goods or rolls of plastic bags in which to lug their food home.

The missing plastic and packaging isn’t an oversight. A carefully constructed supply chain allows Nada to sell hundreds of food products without single-use packaging and add little waste to landfills.

The store’s owner is part of a wave of environmentally conscious entrepreneurs who are opening no-waste markets across Canada in an effort to help Canadians and the grocery industry reduce waste amid a global garbage glut.

Watch: How to cut down on your food waste. Story continues below.

“There’s absolutely a huge demand for this type of shopping,” said Brianne Miller, founder and CEO of Nada, which opened its doors to the public about seven months ago.

The roughly 215-square-metre shop stocks colourful produce; bins of bulk items like flour, confectionery and spices; vats of oils and vinegars; and other goods that customers can buy in any amount. Single eggs and sprigs of herbs? Sure.

The shop encourages customers to bring clean, reusable containers from home to box the food. Shoppers who arrive unprepared can rifle through bins of free miscellaneous containers or purchase reusable packaging.

Patrons weigh and label their container the first time they bring it, and that weight is deducted at check out.

The few products from other companies sold in containers, like Earnest ice-cream or Avalon Dairy milk, charge a deposit fee. Those made in-house charge a high deposit fee, like $4 over the more typical $1, to encourage returns.

Nada started as a pop-up to test the market and Miller soon determined it could be a viable business model in Vancouver. The shop is now on track to break even in the coming months, she said.

She has already expanded the product offering and added a cafe that diverts what could otherwise become food waste from the market’s produce section to an ever-changing menu featuring soups and other dishes.

Runs counter to ‘convenience culture’

Miller plans to open a few more stores in B.C.’s Lower Mainland in the next few years, but recognizes she faces some challenges.

While the business model is a natural complement to the plastic-free trend that hit the mainstream last year with a widespread movement against single-use plastic straws, it seems to run counter to convenience culture. Time-strapped consumers are increasingly buying groceries and takeout meals online.

One customer who stopped by Nada on a weekday morning said while she shops there every couple weeks, it requires some forethought. She must remember to clean her containers and bring them along, but that’s not an insurmountable obstacle.

“It definitely means that you don’t necessarily have the same spontaneous shopping,” said Michelle Genttner, co-owner of soon-to-be opened Unboxed Market in Toronto.

But the stores do their best to accommodate first-time shoppers or forgetful regulars.

Customers will be able to rent or purchase containers from Unboxed, for example, or use available paper bags in a pinch.

Miller hopes Nada helps to dispel what she calls the myth of inconvenience. People who often cook for themselves could likely purchase 90 to 100 per cent of their weekly grocery haul at the store, she said, rattling off a long list of what’s available including freshly baked bread and frozen pierogies. Though the store doesn’t yet sell meat aside from some occasional frozen seafood.

There’s also the added complexity of finding producers willing and able to work with a no-waste grocer’s standards.

Many of Miller’s suppliers send their goods to the store in reusable containers. Some, like one local ice-cream maker, even changed their packaging to suit Nada’s ethos.

But it’s not yet perfect and Miller plans to spend the next several months fine-tuning the system.

One such no-waste store already closed after receiving much fanfare when it opened on B.C.’s Salt Spring Island in 2016. The Canadian Press was not able to contact Green’s former owner, but others in the zero-waste community said they’d heard the store struggled due to its remote location.

Refill stores

However, that doesn’t seem to scare other entrepreneurs from joining the zero-waste movement.

Linh Truong operates The Soap Dispensary in Vancouver, where she’s sold bulk beauty and household products into reusable containers for nearly eight years.

About a year and a half ago, she expanded into the storefront next door with Kitchen Staples, which uses the same concept but with bulk foods. Consumers can stock up on condiments, beans, jams, dairy and more.

At least one person a week contacts Truong for advice on opening their own no-waste market or asking to franchise her model, she said. She’s got no plans for expansion, but believes there’s room for entrepreneurs to create their versions in other communities and even buy-in from major grocers and brands.

Some big companies are taking note of the trend. Loop, which will launch this spring in the U.S. and France, is an online shopping platform that will deliver products in reusable packaging rather than their typical single-use containers. It counts Haagen-Dazs, Tide, Crest, and Dove among its partners.

“There’s a real blossoming of refill stores right now,” said Truong.

One of America’s most influential tabloid publishers is bracing itself for a slew of potentially devastating accusations, after an attempt to silence the world’s richest man spectacularly backfired.

Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, shocked the United States on Thursday with his account of how American Media Inc (AMI), publishers of a series of magazines, attempted to win his cooperation through what he termed “extortion and blackmail”.

He told how the company threatened to publish explicit photographs unless he stopped probing how the magazine, and it’s network of connections leading all the way to the White House, obtained text messages between him and his mistress.

AMI issued a statement denying…

NFCA Announces Its 2015 NAIA All-Region Teams

April 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) is proud to announce the 214 players chosen for the 2015 NFCA NAIA All-Region softball teams.

 

The squad is comprised of two teams in each of the country’s six regions. A total of 78 different schools had players selected.

Three schools — Central Methodist University in the Midwest, Oklahoma City University in the Southwest and Concordia University (Calif.) in the West — shared the most selections for any school with seven each. Three others — Dickinson State in the Central, Our Lady of the Lake in the Southwest and Oregon Institute of Technology in the West — had five honorees each, while 10 schools, including defending national champion Auburn University at Montgomery, garnered four picks apiece.

All-Region players are nominated and selected by NFCA member coaches in each of the six NAIA regions. First team All-Region choices are eligible for selection to the NFCA NAIA All-America team, which will be announced on June 2.

To view the list of selected All-Region players, click HERE

Researchers have identified a genetic variant that is partially responsible for erectile dysfunction, a development that could help improve treatment, according to a study published in a U.S. journal.

Men who have a copy of this variant have a 26 per cent increased risk of facing erectile dysfunction compared to the average population, said the findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Those with two copies of the variant face a 59 per cent higher risk, according to geneticist Eric Jorgenson, the study’s lead author.

The results were based on a database of 36,649 patients of Kaiser Permanente Northern California.

The average population risk is of one in five men, according to a 2007 study in the United States, but the ratio increases sharply with age.

About a third of erectile dysfunction risk is linked to genetic factors. According to the new study, the genetic variant Jorgenson and his colleagues identified alone accounts for two per cent of the risk.

Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease all have genetic components and are also linked to erectile dysfunction.

“We know that there are other factors for ED including smoking, obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and men who address those factors can reduce their risk of ED,” Jorgenson told AFP.

“Because the region that we identified in the human genome appears to act independently of those risk factors, developing new treatments that target the variation in this genetic location has the potential to help those men who do not respond to current treatment.”

He noted that about 50 per cent of men do not respond to erectile dysfunction treatments currently available.

The study’s results were validated by studying a second database in Britain.

The first two games of the 2015 Women’s College World Series Championship Finals between the defending national champion/No. 1 Florida and No. 3 Michigan (best-of-three game series) have resulted in the most-watched WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 ever (Monday, June 1) and college softball’s highest overnight rating in eight years (Game 2 on Tuesday, June 2). Additionally, with Florida’s 3-2 victory in Game 1 and  Michigan’s 1-0 win in Game 2, the Gators and Wolverines will play just the fourth decisive WCWS Championship Finals Game 3 (Wednesday, June 3, 8 p.m. ET on ESPN) in history.  The 2015 WCWS Championship Finals are coming off an ESPN record-setting 2015 Women’s College World Series bracket round (May 28 – May 31).

 

Defending National Champion/No. 1 Florida vs. No. 3 Michigan is Most-Watched WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 Ever

2015 WCWS Finals Game 2: College Softball’s Highest Overnight in Eight Years

Only Fourth Ever Decisive WCWS Championship Finals Game 3 Tonighton ESPN (8 p.m. ET)

The 2015 WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 was watched by 1,542,000 average viewers (off a 1.0 rating), topping the 2009 WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 (Washington vs. Florida) for the most-watched WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 ever (1,412,000 viewers). Tuesday night’s Game 2 garnered a 1.2 overnight rating, resulting in college softball’s highest overnight rating since the 2007 WCWS Championship Finals Game 2 (Tennessee and Arizona)  which earned  a 1.4 overnight. Combined, the 2015 WCWS Championship Finals Games 1 and 2 has averaged a 1.1 overnight, tying it for the second most-watched WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 and Game 2 on record (since 2007).

Additionally, 2015 WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 audience and Game 2 overnight are up 37% (1,126,000 viewers) and 33% (0.9 overnight rating), respectively, compared to the 2014 WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 and Game 2 which featured Alabama vs. Florida.

Please note: Only overnight rating (and not audience numbers) were available for Game 2 when this release was issued

Top Markets (Combined Games 1 and Games 2)

Detroit is the highest-rated local market with a 3.7 rating, followed by Birmingham (3.2), Knoxville (2.9), Jacksonville & Oklahoma City (2.6), Orlando (2.5), Tampa (2.1), Nashville (2.0) and Dayton (1.9).

WatchESPN

The 2015 WCWS Championship Finals Game 1 and Game 2 (combined) has experienced a 120% growth in average minute audience and a 84% spike in total unique viewers on WatchESPN compared to the 2014 WCWS Finals Game 1 and 2.

2015 Women’s College World Series Championship Finals Game 3 (8 p.m. ET, ESPN)

With only the fourth decisive Game 3 to be played tonight, both Florida and Michigan are looking to make history. The Gators would be just the third team to win back-to-back national championships joining UCLA and Arizona – who have each done it multiple times.

Michigan, also going for its second national championship, is trying to duplicate what it did in 2005 – rebound to win both Game 2 and Game 3 after dropping Game 1. In fact, in the other two years (2007, 2012) which a Game 3 was needed, both times the winner of Game 2 went on to win Game 3 (Arizona and Alabama).

— Courtesy of ESPN

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s Foreign Ministry grabbed a chance to question the state of judicial independence in Canada on Friday, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government faced accusations at home that it had tried to intervene to stop a corruption trial.

Trudeau’s domestic troubles have attracted attention in Chinese state media due to his previous assertion that his government cannot interfere in the case of a senior Huawei Technologies Co Ltd executive arrested in Canada and now fighting extradition to the United States.

China has repeatedly called for the release of Meng Wanzhou, the telecommunication giant’s chief financial officer, arrested in Vancouver in December at Washington’s request. In late January the U.S. Justice Department charged Huawei and Meng with conspiring to violate U.S. sanctions on Iran.

Watch: Trudeau comments on SNC-Lavalin, Huawei

At a regular daily news briefing in Beijing, China’s Foreign Ministry took the opportunity to take Canada to task over possible double standards, by commenting on a domestic Canadian political issue that does not otherwise involve China.

Trudeau has disputed allegations by his former justice minister that government officials inappropriately pressured her to help the SNC-Lavalin construction firm avoid a corruption trial.

Asked by a state media journalist if it was contradictory for Trudeau to say he couldn’t interfere in Meng’s case and yet his government be accused of trying to intervene in the SNC-Lavalin case, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said he “really liked this question”.

‘Whole world’ interested in SNC-Lavalin case: foreign ministry spokesman

“Of course I think that this is a question that should be asked of the Canadian government,” Lu said.

“In fact on this case you have mentioned, people in Canada are paying it a great deal of attention,” he added. “In fact, not only Chinese and Canadian citizens, but the whole world are extremely interested to hear how the Canadian government answers this question.”

Both Meng and Huawei have denied the U.S. allegations.

Ottawa has until midnight on Friday (0500 GMT Saturday) to announce whether it will issue an authority to proceed, which would allow a court in the Pacific province of British Columbia to start a formal extradition hearing.

Battlefield V won’t include microtransactions at launch, EA DICE has announced. Microtransactions will be added post-launch using a paid in-game currency called Battlefield Currency, but DICE promises they will only be used for cosmetic items.

“We want players to get hands-on experience with their Company [the name for players’ collections of items], the progression system, and earning Company Coin before introducing premium currency,” DICE said. “Balanced rock-paper-scissors gameplay has always been the foundation of the Battlefield series, and our belief is that real-world money should not enable pay-to-win or pay-for-power.”

Company Coin, an in-game currency you earn solely through play, can be spent on weapon and vehicle upgrades, as well as cosmetic items like weapon skins. Battlefield Currency, acquired with real money, only gives access to “specific cosmetic items for your Company.”

We already knew that Battlefield V would drop the series’ usual premium pass, so EA DICE appears to be going all in on keeping the playing field level both at launch and beyond with its content model.

DICE also outlined the progression system, which is split into five categories and focuses on in-game rewards:

  • Career rank: Overall progression. Increasing your rank earns you Company Coin and new vehicle unlocks.
  • Class rank: Unlocks new combat roles and weapons for the four classes as you level up.
  • Weapon rank: Weapons level up individually allowing you purchase new modifications.
  • Vehicle rank: Like weapons, vehicles level up individually to unlock new modifications.
  • Chapter rank: Tied to Tides of War. Full details haven’t been revealed.

Battlefield V launches November 20 on PS4, Xbox One, and PC. We recently learned that its battle royale mode won’t arrive until March 2019. For more on Battlefield V, check out our hands-on preview of War Stories, the single-player campaign.

Steven Petite is a freelancer writer for IGN. Follow him on Twitter @steven_petite.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Tufts University starts the year where it left off after winning its second straight national championship last May, as the unanimous choice atop the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) Division III Top 25 softball rankings.

The Jumbos went 5-1 in the NCAA Championship at Texas-Tyler’s Suddenlink Field for an overall 13-1 postseason run en route to an overall 47-4 mark in 2014, and received all eight first-place votes to start 2015. Tufts spent nine of 13 weeks in the top spot in 2014, including four straight weeks to start the year and then the final three rankings.

While prolific slugger Jo Clair has graduated and is now a Tufts assistant coach, fellow first team NFCA All-American and co-Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Championship Allyson Fournier returns to the circle for her senior season with the Jumbos. In all, Tufts returns seven starters, including junior shortstop Christina Raso, the 2014 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Defensive Player of the Year, and sophomore first baseman Cassie Ruscz, the NESCAC Rookie of the Year.

Division III runner-up Salisbury (44-5 last season) and fifth-place finisher East Texas Baptist (45-10) are solid choices in the No. 2 and 3 spots following stellar 2014 campaigns. Salisbury spent two weeks at No. 1 last season and vaulted back to the clear second choice in the poll to finish the season after dealing Tufts its first postseason loss since 2012 in the first game of the best-of-3 NCAA Championship Series.

The Sea Gulls’ lone losses in Tyler came in the final two games to Tufts, including a 6-0 loss in 14 innings in the second game of the Championship Series that was scoreless for the first 13.

Rounding out the top five are Wisconsin-Whitewater (39-13) and Christopher Newport (38-8). The No. 4 Warhawks tied for third with 13th-ranked St. Thomas (44-9) at the NCAA Championship, while Christopher Newport had its path to Texas blocked by Salisbury in the Super Regionals.

The other three teams that were in the final eight at the NCAA Championship last season are also ranked. Trine (43-6) is ranked sixth, while Rochester (32-14) is 10th and Montclair State (42-8) is 11th.

The NFCA Division III Top 25 Poll is selected by eight NCAA Division III head coaches representing the eight NCAA regions. Final 2014 records are listed, with first-place votes in parentheses.

For the complete poll, click here

The mother sobbed uncontrollably as she carried her newborn baby to the manager of the muddy and windswept camp in northeastern Syria. The young Syrian woman tried desperately to explain that the child was just 11 days old, and had become suddenly unwell.

“This is no place to bring life into the world,” she said, holding the tiny swaddled infant up to a gas fire. The boy had turned pale, she said, and was struggling to breathe.

She had to wait a while before she was issued a permission slip to take to the medical point, during which time his condition, which appeared to be hypothermia, had worsened dramatically.

The look in her eyes – the only thing visible through her black abaya – suggested…